Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Trump to promote U.S. energy exports

- By Jennifer A. Dlouhy Bloomberg News

WASHINGTON –– Presi-dent Donald Trump will promote surging U.S. exports of oil and natural gas during a week of events to highlight the country’s growing ene-rgy dominance.

Mr. Trump also plans to emphasize that after decades of relying on foreign energy supplies, the U.S. is on the brink of becoming a net exporter of oil, gas, coal and other energy resources.

As with previous White House policy-themed weeks, such as a recent one focusing on infrastruc­ture, the effort is designed to draw attention to Mr. Trump’s domestic priorities and away from more politicall­y treacherou­s matters such as multiple investigat­ions into Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election.

Mr. Trump is returning to familiar territory — and to the coal, oil, and gas industries on which he’s already lavished attention. Mr. Trump’s first major policy speech in his campaign last year, delivered in the oil drilling hotbed of North Dakota in 2016, focused on his plan to unleash domestic energy production. The issue has also been a major focus of Mr. Trump’s first five months in office, as he set in motion the reversal of a variety of Obama administra­tion policies that discourage the production and consumptio­n of fossil fuels.

Plans for the week were described by senior White House officials speaking on theconditi­on of anonymity.

Mr. Trump is to deliver a speech at the Energy Department on Thursday focused almost entirely on energy exports — describing how the foreign sale of U.S. natural gas, oil and coal helps strengthen the country’s influence globally, bolster internatio­nal alliances, and help stabilize global markets. Energy Secretary Rick Perry may touch on similar themes when he speaks Tuesday with analysts and executives at the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion conference in Washington.

“The fact that we’re no longer in the age of energy scarcity — that we’re in the age of energy abundance — positions the United States in a totally different place,” said Dave Banks, a special assistant to the president for internatio­nal energy. “This gives access to affordable, reliable energy in the United States, and gives the U.S. a major competitiv­e advantage.”

With U.S. oil production booming, President Barack Obama signed a law lifting a ban on most crude exports in December 2015. Since then, the U.S. has exported more than 157 million barrels of crude to countries other than Canada, which had been exempt from the export ban.

The federal government has also authorized 21 billion cubic feet a day of natural gas to be liquefied and sent to countries that don’t have free trade agreements with the U.S. Since starting up last year, Cheniere Energy’s Sabine Pass terminal in Louisiana — the first major facility sending shale gas overseas — has sent liquefied natural gas to such as Mexico, China and Turkey.

Mr. Trump plans to talk about opportunit­ies for growth, including in sales of coal to Europe and Asia. A recent increase in the production of metallurgi­cal coal used in steel manufactur­ing has helped East Coast terminals ship more of the resource overseas.

The president is also expected to describe openings for other energy exports, including U.S. technology that harnesses power from the wind and sun, and a new generation of advanced and modular nuclear reactors. Some nuclear power advocates have argued that the U.S. government process of licensing advanced reactor designs is so lengthy that it discourage­s investment.

The Trump administra­tion has begun reversing regulation­s and policies that have limited energy developmen­t or made it more expensive, such as by ending a moratorium on new coal leases on federal land, and overturnin­g a rule governing coal mining pollution in streams.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States